REQUESTED BY: Dear Senator Maresh:
This is in response to your letter of March 6, 1980, which concerns a proposed amendment to LB 909, regarding the termination of perpetual care trusts and perpetual special care trusts which are established under sections
The overall intent of sections
The implication of this concept of perpetual care, however, is that the funds, trusts, or trust funds established for the purpose of such perpetual care are also perpetual in nature.
In fact, section
The mere fact that a trust is considered a perpetual trust does not necessarily mean that it is irrevocable, in the sense that the trustee may not be removed and substituted by another trustee. The intent and requirement of sections
Thus it appears that the primary intent and wording of the statute is that the word `perpetual' as used in the terms perpetual care fund, perpetual care trust fund, and perpetual special care trusts applies to the continual care to be provided for the maintenance and upkeep of the cemeteries and the individual grave sites. Nevertheless, there is also specific wording and the underlying implication that the word `perpetual' as used in the terms perpetual care trust fund and perpetual special care trusts also refers to the continuing nature of the respective trust or trust fund. While these trusts or trust funds may be regarded as perpetual trusts, as provided by statute, this does not imply that any trust agreement entered into between a cemetery association and a corporate fiduciary is irrevocable in the sense that the association could not remove an existing corporate trustee and appoint a substitute trustee.
